Skeptical Thinking Is Key to Finding Better Sounding Records
UPDATE 2026
This commentary was written circa 2006. The Hot Stamper world was very different then. A few dozen had been done starting in 2004, and probably not nearly as well as they should have been, truth be told.
This was unexplored territory, a new world. At the time we had no way of knowing how much there was to learn and how much time and effort would go into learning it. Thousands of shootouts later we have a pretty firm grip on how to go about finding the best sounding pressings of the greatest music ever recorded. Those recordings, the ones that have stood the test of time, are why this blog exists.
Our Story, Circa 2006
A while back one of our good customers wrote to tell us how much he liked his Century Direct to Disc recording of the Glenn Miller big band, one of the few truly amazing sounding direct discs offering music actually worth listening to. Which brought me to the subject of Hot Stampers.
Hot Stamper pressings of jazz or popular music are almost always going to be studio multi-track recordings, not direct to disc recordings of live performances.
They will invariably suffer a great many compromises compared to the purist approach of an audiophile label trying to eliminate sources of distortion in the pursuit of the highest fidelity, in this case the loss of sound quality caused by the use of a tape recorder.
But when they do that, they almost always fail.









